12.16.2024

Warming up on South Congress in anticipation this week of my last commercial assignment for the year. Still having fun with that crazy Sigma fp camera. Who knew?

I went photographing and holiday shopping on the ever popular 
South Congress Ave. (AKA: SOCO) today to look for gifts
and get my hands and eyes warmed up for work this week.
I got lots of fun photos but I was only able to buy.....
a cappuccino. It was good. 

It's odd. I thought this December was going to be a slow, relaxed and non-work month. I kept trying to get out of the business but they kept pulling me back in... But the best laid plans...

I've actually gotten quite busy this year end which is probably more an indication that businesses took a deep breath before the November elections and decided to pause in order to see what might happen next. That generated a backlog of demand for overdue services and...boom... the rush into the end of the year was on. Mostly my work has been with law firms and medical practices this year. Especially here at the end. And no matter what you hear from the whining chorus on the internet clients seem happy to spend  right now and largely are indifferent to whatever budget figure you might toss their way. It's a good time to be a freelance photographer. Or, at least it is from my perspective. 

On Wednesday this week I'll pack up the car with lighting and camera goodies, make a detour over to the pool for the morning swim practice, and then head straight downtown to park on the 2nd floor of the parking garage connected to the 26 story building in which my favorite law firm (I'm a vendor and also a client!!!) occupies a couple of floors. I'll set up two very new Nanlite Compact 100 panels, toss some diffusion on one and call it "fill"; put a grid on the other and call it "main." The Compact 100 panels are self-contained, soft light, LED fixtures that offer very nice, soft light from a 16 by 24 inch front diffusion panel. You can use them bare as defacto soft boxes or you can put Nanlite's extra diffusion cover on the front (which adds about two inches more to the depth of the light. Alternately you can use their egg crate, grid attachment to make the light more directional, with less spill. A bit of control for those of you who need more control. I'm also bringing along several of the Nanlite LumiPad 25s which are smaller panels that give you soft light from a 12 by 14 inch panel that's only 1.2 inches in depth. 

While the bigger, Compac 100s need to be plugged into an A/C source the smaller LumiPad 25s can be wall powered or they can be powered by Sony video-style NPF batteries. These smaller panels make very nice hair lights, background lights and accent lights, and they take up so little space in a travel case that it seems dumb to not bring them along just in case. 

With this particular client; the one I'm working with on Wednesday morning, we've always used continuous light because we find our best locations for environmental portraits in the public spaces around their offices. Since most of their client conference rooms are nearby and have frosted glass walls the continuous lighting is much less intrusive/disturbing/distracting than what we'd get with pop after pop of electronic flash lighting. We've lit the portraits for this client with continuous light LEDs for going on ten years now and it just plain works. It's also easy to match our lights with existing interior lights and the light coming through floor-to-ceiling windows in most parts of their offices. 

The four LED lights pack into one rolling case with a second, soft bag for the light stands and tripod. Instead of having to put up soft boxes or separate diffusion frames for our lights these hard shell panels go straight onto light stands, get plugged into the wall and are ready to go on the spot. Time savings? At least ten minutes saved per set up. And the same again on the back end.

We do a photo style for this firm that incorporates their office environments as backgrounds. These are thrown mostly out of focus but it's a fine line because you want them to read as distinct, nicely designed interiors. We light our portraits of attorneys to get the same soft look one gets from using a medium sized soft box or umbrella from close in. For math geeks we try to put the light at a distance from the subject roughly equal to 1.5 times the diagonal measure of the light emitting surface. A bit more if we are using a low ratio fill. This gives me soft transitions in shadows and helps to subdue unwanted skin textures. 

We've used so many different cameras and lenses over the years; everything from micro 4:3 cameras to Fuji medium format models. The point of continuity is that we're generally staying within a 70-105mm, 35mm focal length equivalent for our portraits. Usually an 85mm on a full frame sensor camera and a 120mm on a MF camera. A 50mm lens on an M4:3. All of the images are shot in a horizontal orientation  because that was the style set for me by the original webpage designer. And it's worked well for the client (with updates along the way...) for the last decade. 

On Wednesday I'll be doing portraits of two different attorneys; new additions to the firm. I arrive at 10am and I'll be ready to do the first portrait by about 10:30. Then I'll reset in order to get a slightly different but stylistically similar background. I'll do the second portrait at 11:30 and then pack up and be home in time for lunch. And maybe a nap...

On this week's adventure I thought it would be fun to mix up gear between two kinds of systems. I'll use the Leica SL2-S as the primary camera and then use either the 75mm f1.9 Voigtlander Ultron or the VM 90mm APO-Skopar f2.8 lens, depending on how much room I have to maneuver in. Both are great lenses and both are designed for use with the M series cameras. But all it takes to adapt them to the SL camera is a simple, Leica M-L adapter. I guess, out of habit, I'll toss the Sigma fp into the camera bag as a back-up. One never knows.... Best to be prepared. Merit badges for the folks with a solid "plan B." 

I'm of the belief that one needs to commit to frequent practice in anything that requires eye and hand coordination, and also requires dealing congenially with other humans. Take too much time between practices and you lose that special touch you had between your seeing and your reactions. And, without warming up to other humans on a regular basis you might become touchy, grouchy, or otherwise antisocially bombastic. So, I was out with a camera today and will probably be out again tomorrow for a number of reasons...but warming up for my two sessions on Wednesday is the current catalyst to keeping up momentum. It's also nice to look out toward infinity for a large sections of the day. Good for your eyes and your brain. I'm also breaking in some winter boots for upcoming travel. You have to walk in them to do that.  And, I had a wonderful time just walking around in a t-shirt and short pants in the middle of December. It was 76° here today. Nice...but weird. 

Hope you guys are doing well. Stay in touch. The family rush of the holidays is a meager excuse for not leaving comments!!! 

Somebody else is still out shooting fun stuff for a living. Count on it.


Who knew that curtains could be so visually delightful?






I was at Maufrais today. It's mostly a high end hat shop in SOCO.
JC recently sent me a thoughtful note about why I should never, ever wear a
Stetson Open Road hat. Like the one LBJ always wore. His argument was
sound. I thought I'd go by and look at them one last time...
Well, that's $425 saved.




The mannequins on SOCO are snottier than the ones downtown. 
But you can see the family resemblance. Yeah?




I walked by this woman sitting in front of a coffee shop working on her laptop.
I observed that she was, in a certain way, very beautiful. I don't know why I walked by.
But I got twenty or thirty feet down the sidewalk and decided I really wanted to to photograph
her just as she was. I turned around, walked back and asked her permission 
to make a photo. She said 'yes' and started to close her laptop, turn and smile.
But I wanted an image of what she looked like at work so I smiled and 
asked her if that would be okay. It was.
When I got the frame I wanted I thanked her very much.
She replied, "Thank you for asking first. I appreciate that." 

And there it is.

 

5 comments:

  1. Are those maracas in front of you in the self-portrait inside the hat shop? If so, why does a hat shop sell maracas?

    That snooty mannequin head in profile dressed in fur reminds me of a sculpture. I want to say Giacometti but that's not right. I'm drawing a blank.

    I lost track. Did you ever get to Montreal again?

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  2. Hi Robert, I actually have no clue as to what those objects are in front of me. But they look fun when out of focus. Right? I like the idea that the mannequins are akin to Giacometti sculptures so I'm happy to go with that. And since HCB did a marvelous photo of Giacometti running through the rain with a coat over his head all of this still relates to photography. Nice.

    I have been to Montreal twice in the last two years but unfortunately had to postpone my much wanted trip in 2024 to take care of a family member. Hopefully I'll be able to make up for the snow in late January or February. Prime northern vacation times....

    ReplyDelete
  3. No qualifiers need for that comment, Kirk. Just very beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  4. May I ask why your friend dislikes the Open Road hat? Or just for you?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Gary, My friend John just thinks they look...bad. He's pretty smart. I'll give him that one.

      Delete

Life is too short to make everyone happy all the time...